Figure 100 is a photo of the brick tested at U.W.  The glazed surface holds a magnet:  clear indication that it once lined an iron furnace.

 

       Figure 101 shows the profile of the brick maker, which does not resemble a native American.

 

Fig. 100.-- [#080504]

 

Fig. 101.-- [#064005]

 

CLICK photos to enlarge

 

 

 

LUMINESCENCE ANALYSIS OF FIRED CLAY FROM VIRGINIA – UW3749

29 April 2019

James K. Feathers

Luminescence Dating Laboratory

University of Washington

Seattle, WA 98195-3412

Email: jimf@uw.edu

 

                This report presents the results of luminescence analysis on a brick samplea from an apparent smelting site in northern Shenandoah Valley, Frederick County, Virginia.    The samples, submitted by Adam Arkfield, the owner of the property, is a brick with a black glazed surface (lab number UW3749).   Luminescence was evaluated using fine-grain procedures.  Coarse quartz  grains were prepared but no data were obtained from them.  Laboratory procedures for the fine grains are given in the appendix. 

 

Dose rate

                The dose rate was measured on the sample and associated sediment.  Dose rates were mainly determined using alpha counting and flame photometry.  The beta dose rate calculated from these measurements was compared with the beta dose rate measured directly by beta counting.  These differed significantly, possibly due to disequilibrium in the U decay chain.   The beta dose rate from beta counting was used for age calculation.     Moisture content of the brick was estimated as 80 ± 20 % of the saturated value, or 7% for UW3749.  Associated sediment was estimated to have 15 ± 5% moisture content.  Cosmic dose radiation was calculated as explained in the appendix.  Table 1 gives the radioactivity data and Table 2 gives the dose rate.

 

Table 1.  Radionuclide concentrations

Sample

238U

(ppm)

233Th

(ppm)

K

(%)

Beta dose rate (Gy/ka)

ß-counting

α-counting/flame photometry

UW3749

5.36±0.35

12.98±1.50

1.55±0.04

1.90±0.16

2.41±0.07

Sediment

2.86±0.29

21.17±1.89

2.98±0.09

 

 

 

Table 2.  Dose rates (Gy/ka)*

Sample

alpha

beta

gamma

cosmic

total

UW3749

0.75±0.19

1.75±0.08

1.59±0.10

0.21±0.04

4.30±0.23

* Dose rates for fine grains are calculated for  OSL.  They will be higher for TL due to higher b-values.   Also the beta dose rate is lower than that given in Table 2 due to moisture correction.

 

Equivalent Dose

            Equivalent dose on 1-8µm grains was measured for TL, OSL and IRSL as described in the appendix.    For TL, only a narrow plateau from 250-290°C could be obtained.   A poor plateau could be indicative of poor firing. There was no sensitivity change with heating.    Measured TL anomalous fading was insignificant, but was based on only limited data.

OSL/IRSL was measured on 6 aliquots. Scatter was low with over-dispersion of about 10%.  A reliable IRSL signal was not detected.   IRSL stems from feldspars, which are prone to anomalous fading.  No IRSL suggests the OSL is dominated by quartz.  Moreover, the OSL b-value, which is a measure of the efficiency of alpha radiation in producing luminescence as compared to beta and gamma radiation, is in the typical range of quartz.  It is likely the OSL signal stems mainly from quartz and does not fade.  As a test of the SAR procedures, a dose recovery test was performed but the derived dose was under-estimated for UW3749 at one sigma, but close at two sigma. Equivalent dose values and b-values are given in Table 3.   

 

Table 3. Equivalent dose and b-value – fine grains

Sample

N

Equivalent dose (Gy)

b-value (Gy µm2)

TL

IRSL

OSL

TL

IRSL

OSL

UW3749

6

6.89±1.72

12.0±3.31

8.71±0.43

1.23±0.23

 

0.53±0.12

 

 

Ages

                Age is given in Table 4.   The OSL age is AD 10 ± 160.  It was younger for TL, probably because of anomalous fading.  The ages for two samples submitted previously ranged from AD 150 to AD 170.  Prehistoric smelting has previously been unknown in the United States, although it was present in South America about this time.   The older ages obtained here may reflect uneven heating of the samples, where portions of the sample did not have their luminescence signal completely reset at the time of firing.  Narrow plateaus may also reflect uneven firing. 

 

Table 4.  Ages

Sample

Age (ka)

% error

Basis

Calendar date

UW3749

2.03±0.16

7.9

OSL

AD 10 ± 160

 

 


Appendix

 

Procedures for Thermoluminescence Analysis of Ceramics

Sample preparation -- fine grain

 

The fired clay is broken to expose a fresh profile.  Material is drilled from the center of the cross-section, more than 2 mm from either surface, using a tungsten carbide drill tip.  The material retrieved is ground gently by an agate mortar and pestle, treated with HCl, and then settled in acetone for 2 and 20 minutes to separate the 1-8 µm fraction.  This is settled onto a maximum of 72 stainless steel discs..

 

Glow-outs

 

Thermoluminescence is measured by a Daybreak reader using a 9635Q photomultiplier with a Corning 7-59 blue filter, in N2 atmosphere at 1°C/s to 450°C.  A preheat of 240°C with no hold time precedes each measurement.  Artificial irradiation is given with a 241Am alpha source and a 90Sr beta source, the latter calibrated against a 137Cs gamma source.  Discs are stored at room temperature for at least one week after irradiation before glow out.  Data are processed by Daybreak TLApplic software. 

 

Fading test

 

Several discs are used to test for anomalous fading.  The natural luminescence is first measured by heating to 450°C.  The discs are then given an equal alpha irradiation and stored at room temperature for varied times: 10 min, 2 hours, 1 day, 1 week and 8 weeks.  The irradiations are staggered in time so that all of the second glows are performed on the same day.  The second glows are normalized by the natural signal and then compared to determine any loss of signal with time (on a log scale).  If the sample shows fading and the signal versus time values can be reasonably fit to a logarithmic function, an attempt is made to correct the age following procedures recommended by Huntley and Lamothe (2001).  The fading rate is calculated as the g-value, which is given in percent per decade, where decade represents a power of 10.

 

Equivalent dose

 

The equivalent dose is determined by a combination additive dose and regeneration (Aitken 1985).  Additive dose involves administering incremental doses to natural material.  A growth curve plotting dose against luminescence can be extrapolated to the dose axis to estimate an equivalent dose, but for pottery this estimate is usually inaccurate because of errors in extrapolation due to nonlinearity.  Regeneration involves zeroing natural material by heating to 450°C and then rebuilding a growth curve with incremental doses.  The problem here is sensitivity change caused by the heating.  By constructing both curves, the regeneration curve can be used to define the extrapolated area and can be corrected for sensitivity change by comparing it with the additive dose curve.  This works where the shapes of the curves differ only in scale (i.e., the sensitivity change is independent of dose).  The curves are combined using the “Australian slide” method in a program developed by David Huntley of Simon Fraser University (Prescott et al. 1993).  The equivalent dose is taken as the horizontal distance between the two curves after a scale adjustment for sensitivity change.  Where the growth curves are not linear, they are fit to quadratic functions.  Dose increments (usually five) are determined so that the maximum additive dose results in a signal about three times that of the natural and the maximum regeneration dose about five times the natural.

 

A plateau region is determined by calculating the equivalent dose at temperature increments between 240° and 450°C and determining over which temperature range the values do not differ significantly.  This plateau region is compared with a similar one constructed for the b-value (alpha efficiency), and the overlap defines the integrated range for final analysis.

 

Alpha effectiveness

 

Alpha efficiency is determined by comparing additive dose curves using alpha and beta irradiations.  The slide program is also used in this regard, taking the scale factor (which is the ratio of the two slopes) as the b-value (Aitken 1985).

 

Radioactivity

 

Radioactivity is measured by alpha counting in conjunction with atomic emission for 40K.  Samples for alpha counting are crushed in a mill to flour consistency, packed into plexiglass containers with ZnS:Ag screens, and sealed for one month before counting.  The pairs technique is used to separate the U and Th decay series. For atomic emission measurements, samples are dissolved in HF and other acids and analyzed by a Jenway flame photometer.  K concentrations for each sample are determined by bracketing between standards of known concentration.  Conversion to 40K is by natural atomic abundance.  Radioactivity is also measured, as a check, by beta counting, using a Risø low level beta GM multicounter system.   About 0.5 g of crushed sample is placed on each of four plastic sample holders.  All are counted for 24 hours.  The average is converted to dose rate following Bøtter-Jensen and Mejdahl (1988) and compared with the beta dose rate calculated from the alpha counting and flame photometer results.

 

Both the ceramic and an associated soil sample are measured for radioactivity.  Additional soil samples are analyzed where the environment is complex, and gamma contributions determined by gradients (after Aitken 1985: appendix H).  Cosmic radiation is determined after Prescott and Hutton (1994).   Radioactivity concentrations are translated into dose rates following Guérin et al. (2011).

 

Moisture Contents

 

Water absorption values for the ceramics are determined by comparing the saturated and dried weights.  For temperate climates, moisture in the pottery is taken to be 80 ± 20 percent of total absorption, unless otherwise indicated by the archaeologist.  Again for temperate climates, soil moisture contents are taken from typical moisture retention quantities for different textured soils (Brady 1974: 196), unless otherwise measured.  For drier climates, moisture values are determined in consultation with the archaeologist.

 

Procedures for Optically Stimulated or Infrared Stimulated Luminescence of Fine-grained ceramics.

 

                Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) and infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) on fine-grain (1-8µm) samples are carried out on single aliquots following procedures adapted from Banerjee et al. (2001) and Roberts and Wintle (2001.  Equivalent dose is determined by the single-aliquot regenerative dose (SAR) method (Murray and Wintle 2000).

 

                The SAR method measures the natural signal and the signal from a series of regeneration doses on a single aliquot.  The method uses a small test dose to monitor and correct for sensitivity changes brought about by preheating, irradiation or light stimulation.  SAR consists of the following steps: 1) preheat, 2) measurement of natural signal (OSL or IRSL), L(1), 3) test dose, 4) cut heat, 5) measurement of test dose signal, T(1), 6) regeneration dose, 7) preheat, 8) measurement of signal from regeneration, L(2), 9) test dose, 10) cut heat, 11) measurement of test dose signal, T(2), 12) repeat of steps 6 through 11 for various regeneration doses.  A growth curve is constructed from the L(i)/T(i) ratios and the equivalent dose is found by interpolation of L(1)/T(1).  Usually a zero regeneration dose and a repeated regeneration dose are employed to insure the procedure is working properly.  For fine-grained ceramics, a preheat of 240°C for 10s, a test dose of 3.1 Gy, and a cut heat of 200°C are currently being used, although these parameters may be modified from sample to sample.

 

                The luminescence, L(i) and T(i), is measured  on a Risø TL-DA-15 automated reader by a succession of two stimulations: first 100 s at 60°C of IRSL (880nm diodes), and then 100s at 125°C of OSL (470nm diodes).  Detection is through 7.5mm of Hoya U340 (ultra-violet) filters.  The two stimulations are used to construct IRSL and OSL growth curves, so that two estimations of equivalent dose are available.  Anomalous fading usually involves feldspars and only feldspars are sensitive to IRSL stimulation.  The rationale for the IRSL stimulation is to remove most of the feldspar signal, so that the subsequent OSL (post IR blue) signal is free from anomalous fading.  However, feldspar is also sensitive to blue light (470nm), and it is possible that IRSL does not remove all the feldspar signal.  Some preliminary tests in our laboratory have suggested that the OSL signal does not suffer from fading, but this may be sample specific.  The procedure is still undergoing study.

 

A dose recovery test is performed by first zeroing the sample by exposure to light and then administering a known dose.  The SAR protocol is then applied to see if the known dose can be obtained.

 

                Alpha efficiency will surely differ among IRSL, OSL and TL on fine-grained materials.  It does differ between coarse-grained feldspar and quartz (Aitken 1985).  Research is currently underway in the laboratory to determine how much b-value varies according to stimulation method.  Results from several samples from different geographic locations show that OSL b-value is less variable and centers around 0.5.  IRSL b-value is more variable and is higher than that for OSL.  TL b-value tends to fall between the OSL and IRSL values.  We currently are measuring the b-value for IRSL and OSL by giving an alpha dose to aliquots whose luminescence have been drained by exposure to light.  An equivalent dose is determined by SAR using beta irradiation, and the beta/alpha equivalent dose ratio is taken as the b-value.  A high OSL b-value is indicative that feldspars might be contributing to the signal and thus subject to anomalous fading.

 

 

Age and error terms

                The age and error for both OSL and TL are calculated by a laboratory constructed spreadsheet, based on Aitken (1985).  All error terms are reported at 1-sigma.  Ka is thousand years before 2018.

 

 

References

 

Adamiec, G., and Aitken, M. J., 1998, Dose rate conversion factors: update.  Ancient TL 16:37-50.

 

Aitken,  M. J., 1985, Thermoluminescence Dating, Academic Press, London.

 

Auclair, M., et al., 2003.  Measurement of anomalous fading for feldspar IRSL using SAR. Radiation Measurements, 37: 487-492.

 

Banerjee, D., Murray, A. S., Bøtter-Jensen, L., and Lang, A., 2001, Equivalent dose estimation using a single aliquot of polymineral fine grains.  Radiation Measurements 33:73-93.

 

Bøtter-Jensen, L, and Mejdahl, V., 1988, Assessment of beta dose-rate using a GM multi-counter system.  Nuclear Tracks and Radiation Measurements 14:187-191.

 

Brady, N. C., 1974,  The Nature and Properties of Soils, Macmillan, New York.

 

Galbraith, R. F., and Roberts, R. G., 2012.  Statistical aspects of equivalent dose and error calculation and display in OSL dating: an overview and some recommendations.  Quaternary Geochronology 11:1-27.

 

Guérin, G., Mercier, N., and Adamiec, G., 2011, Dose-rate converstion factors: update.  Ancient TL 29:5-8.

 

Huntley, D. J., and Lamothe, M., 2001, Ubiquity of anomalous fading in K-feldspars, and measurement and correction for it in optical dating.  Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 38:1093-1106.

 

Mejdahl, V., 1983, Feldspar inclusion dating of ceramics and burnt stones.  PACT 9:351-364.

 

Murray, A. S., and Wintle, A. G., 2000, Luminescence dating of quartz using an improved single-aliquot regenerative-dose protocol.  Radiation Measurements 32:57-73.

 

Prescott, J. R., Huntley, D. J., and Hutton, J. T., 1993, Estimation of equivalent dose in thermoluminescence dating – the Australian slide method.  Ancient TL 11:1-5.

 

Prescott, J. R., and Hutton, J. T., 1994, Cosmic ray contributions to dose rates for luminescence and ESR dating: large depths and long time durations.  Radiation Measurements 23:497-500.

 

Roberts, H. M., and Wintle, A. G., 2001, Equivalent dose determinations for polymineralic fine-grains using the SAR protocol: application to a Holocene sequence of the Chinese Loess Plateau.  Quaternary Science Reviews 20:859-863.